Automated Author ProfileTeichert, Barbara M A
0000-0003-1729-9064
Teichert, Barbara M A
Current S-Index
Sum of Dataset Indices for all datasets
Average Dataset Index per Dataset
Average Dataset Index per dataset
Total Datasets
Total datasets for this author
Average FAIR Score
Average FAIR Score per dataset
Total Citations
Total citations to the author's datasets
Total Mentions
Total mentions of the author's datasets
S-Index Interpretation
The S-Index (Sharing Index) is a comprehensive metric that represents the cumulative impact of all your datasets. It is calculated as the sum of Dataset Index scores across all your claimed datasets.
What it means:
- A higher S-index indicates greater overall impact of your datasets relative to typical datasets in their fields of research
- The S-Index grows as you add more datasets or as existing datasets gain more citations and mentions
- It provides a single number to track your research data impact over time
Current S-Index: 26.3 (sum of 17 datasets Dataset Index scores)
More information here.
S-Index Over Time
Cumulative Citations Over Time
Cumulative Mentions Over Time
Datasets
No description available
Authors
- Lin, Zhiyong ;
- Sun, Xiaoming ;
- Peckmann, Jörn ;
- Lu, Yang ;
- Xu, Li ;
- Strauss, Harald ;
- Zhou, Haoyang ;
- Gong, Junli ;
- Lu, Hongfeng ;
- Teichert, Barbara M A
No description available
Authors
- Lin, Zhiyong ;
- Sun, Xiaoming ;
- Peckmann, Jörn ;
- Lu, Yang ;
- Xu, Li ;
- Strauss, Harald ;
- Zhou, Haoyang ;
- Gong, Junli ;
- Lu, Hongfeng ;
- Teichert, Barbara M A
No description available
Authors
- Lin, Zhiyong ;
- Sun, Xiaoming ;
- Peckmann, Jörn ;
- Lu, Yang ;
- Xu, Li ;
- Strauss, Harald ;
- Zhou, Haoyang ;
- Gong, Junli ;
- Lu, Hongfeng ;
- Teichert, Barbara M A
No description available
Authors
- Teichert, Barbara M A ;
- Gussone, Nikolaus ;
- Torres, Marta E
No description available
Authors
- Teichert, Barbara M A ;
- Gussone, Nikolaus ;
- Torres, Marta E
Carbonate mineralogy and carbonate content were determined on 65 samples from Sites 1244-1252, which were drilled on southern Hydrate Ridge and in an adjacent slope basin at the Cascadia accretionary prism. X-ray diffraction analyses data indicate varying carbonate compositions. Pure calcites are rare but were found at Sites 1246 and 1252. Low- and high-magnesium calcites are the dominant carbonate mineralogies and occur at all sites. The presence of dolomite is characteristic for the slope basin sites. The sampling depth of the carbonates varies from near seafloor to deep within the accretionary complex, suggesting different modes of carbonate formation. The summit, flank, and slope basin sites show characteristic carbonate compositions with different carbonate contents in distinct depth intervals.
Authors
- Teichert, Barbara M A ;
- Bohrmann, Gerhard
No description available
Authors
- Teichert, Barbara M A ;
- Torres, Marta E ;
- Bohrmann, Gerhard ;
- Eisenhauer, Anton
No description available
Authors
- Teichert, Barbara M A ;
- Torres, Marta E ;
- Bohrmann, Gerhard ;
- Eisenhauer, Anton
Aragonitic clathrites are methane-derived precipitates that are found at sites of massive near-seafloor gas hydrate (clathrate) accumulations at the summit of southern Hydrate Ridge, Cascadia margin. These platy carbonate precipitates form inside or in proximity to gas hydrate, which in our study site currently coexists with a fluid that is highly enriched in dissolved ions as salts are excluded during gas hydrate formation. The clathrites record the preferential incorporation of 18O into the hydrate structure and hence the enrichment of 16O in the surrounding brine. We measured d18O values as high as 2.27 per mil relative to Peedee belemnite that correspond to a fluid composition of -1.18 per mil relative to standard mean ocean water. The same trend can be observed in Ca isotopes. Ongoing clathrite precipitation causes enrichment of the 44Ca in the fluid and hence in the carbonates. Carbon isotopes confirm a methane source for the carbonates. Our triple stable isotope approach that uses the three main components of carbonates (Ca, C, O) provides insight into multiple parameters influencing the isotopic composition of the pore water and hence the isotopic composition of the clathrites. This approach provides a tool to monitor the geochemical processes during clathrate and clathrite formation, thus recording the evolution of the geochemical environment of gas hydrate systems.
Authors
- Teichert, Barbara M A ;
- Gussone, Nikolaus ;
- Eisenhauer, Anton ;
- Bohrmann, Gerhard
Two active chemoherm build-ups growing freely up into the oceanic water column, the Pinnacle and the South East-Knoll Chemoherms, have been discovered at Hydrate Ridge on the Cascadia continental margin. These microbially-mediated carbonate formations rise above the seafloor by several tens of meters and display a pinnacle-shaped morphology with steep flanks. The recovered rocks are pure carbonates dominated by aragonite. Based on fabric and mineralogic composition different varieties of authigenic aragonite can be distinguished. Detailed visual and petrographic investigations unambiguously reveal the involvement of microbes during the formation of the carbonates. The fabric of the cryptocrystalline and fibrous aragonite can be described as thrombolitic. Fossilized microbial filaments in the microcrystalline aragonite indicate the intimate relationship between microbes and carbonates. The strongly 13C-depleted carbon isotope values of the samples (as low as -48.1 per mill PDB) are characteristic of methane as the major carbon source for the carbonate formation. The methane-rich fluids from which the carbonates are precipitated originate most probably from a gas reservoir below the bottom-simulating reflector (BSR) and rise through fault systems. The d18O values of the aragonitic chemoherm carbonates are substantially higher (as high as 5.0 per mill PDB) than the expected equilibrium value for an aragonite forming from ambient seawater (3.5 per mill PDB). As a first approximation this indicates formation from glacial ocean water but other factors are considered as well. A conceptual model is presented for the precipitation of these chemoherm carbonates based on in situ observations and the detailed petrographic investigation of the carbonates. This model explains the function of the consortium of archaea and sulfate-reducing bacteria that grows on the carbonates performing anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) and enabling the precipitation of the chemoherms above the seafloor surrounded by oxic seawater. Beggiatoa mats growing on the surface of the chemoherms oxidize the sulfide provided by sulfate-dependent anaerobic oxidation of methane within an oxic environment. The contact between Beggiatoa and the underlying microbial consortium represents the interface between the overlying oxic water column and an anoxic micro-environment where carbonate formation takes place.
Authors
- Teichert, Barbara M A ;
- Bohrmann, Gerhard ;
- Suess, Erwin